Planets in our Solar System

Scale drawing of the relative sizes of planets and moons in the solar system.

The Attitude of Christianity(Taken for the most part from R. Powell's excellent History of the Planets - see bibliography)

Christianity tried to eliminate paganism but in fact half the Chaldean doctrine was Christianised. The soul's descent into incarnation was discarded, but its ascension post mortem through the planetary spheres was retained. For the pagan gods presiding over the planetary spheres Christian teaching substituted the celestial hierarchies described in the works of Pseudo-Dionysius. These hierarchies were conceived of in ascending rank, each attributed to a planetary sphere:

Angels - sphere of the Moon;Archangels - sphere of Mercury;Principalities - sphere of Venus;Powers - sphere of the Sun;Virtues - sphere of Mars;Dominions - sphere of Jupiter;Thrones - sphere of Saturn;Cherubim - sphere of the zodiac of fixed stars;Seraphim - sphere of crystal.It was considered that after death the human soul re-ascended the planetary spheres to attain the Empyrean. There, beyond the planetary spheres and the sphere of fixed stars, sat the Holy Trinity. Dante's Divine Comedy depicts this ascension of the soul through the planetary spheres and the corresponding ranks of the different hierarchies.

Christianity has recognised the principle of the soul's survival and reascension through the planetary spheres after death. Ancient Chaldean theology recognised in addition the soul's pre-existence and descent through the planetary spheres into incarnation. One simple gesture would have allowed the two teachings to merge in harmony. This was undertaken only by certain gnostic, kabbalistic and initiatory communities.

Translator's Note:* English versions of these texts are available. The two titles by the author, like his other excellent works on traditional astrology of east and west, have not as yet been translated into English.

Notes & References:

1] The word 'Chaldean' originally referred to the priestly caste of Babylon, but later designated their Greek and Egyptian disciples. The stamp of Greek philosophy and astronomy had much modified and developed the original Babylonian teaching.

2] This is likewise the order followed by the rulers of the planetary hours, the rulers of the Egyptian decans (sometimes referred to as 'faces') and the planets on the Tree of Life in the Jewish Kabbalah.

3] Metaphorically, the 'Creator' is the architect who designs the universe and whose plan, the 'First Intelligence', is followed by the 'Demiurge' in charge of building the universe.

4] Note the origin of the expressions 'astral body' and 'sidereal body'.

5] Certain philosophers considered this fate inexorable. Neoplatonic philosophers and hermeticists were not so rigid. Recognising its existence, they were able to loosen certain of its constraints. Iamblichus (in The Mysteries of Egypt) recalled that the particular character of the personal daimon was judged according to the strongest planet in the nativity, and around 263-8 Al) Porphyry wrote: "Blessed is he who, knowing his geniture and ipso facto his own daimon, exorcises fate".

6] See also Marconis, J.-Et. Travaux Complets Des Sublimes Maitres Du Grand-Oeuvre (Complete Labours of the Sublime Masters of the Great Work), Paris, 1866, p.25:"The second goal was to seek the means to redeem matter, which it was believed had also fallen; the seven metals, each of which bore the name of a planet, formed the ascending ladder of material purification corresponding to the moral ordeals of the seven heavens..."

7] These texts remain incomprehensible to the astrologer unversed in the vision of the world that presided at their formulation. The hermetic conception of astrology stands at the very antipodes of the psychological astrology generally practised in Europe at the close of the 20th century. The latter's aim is to get man to make the most of the conditioning and 'potential' with which he is born. The goal of hermetic astrology is, on the contrary, to aid man to divest himself of this conditioning and potential, thus to witness the transformation of an existence and a universe into ever brighter reflection of the divine flame which abides beyond the planetary forces. The psychological thrust of modern astrology is the quest for happiness on earth; the metaphysical thrust of traditional astrology is the quest for freedom in heaven. The real question for the astrologer is not "to what extent is it more-or-less possible to use my free will to live best?", rather "I recognise the power of the conditioning which girds my inmost being. Can I regain my freedom and, if so, how?". This is the question answered by spiritual and initiatory techniques of all times.

8] The earliest textual versions of the Degree of Knight of the Sun date from the end of the 18th century. Essentially they represent a mode of instruction in alchemy. Revisions made in the second half of the 19th century accentuate the astrological interpretation.

The Advent of Astrology

Stars and planets, being the visible image of the gods, were consulted from remotest antiquity. Between the 18th and 15th centuries BCE priority was accorded to unusual phenomena, such as eclipses or the appearance of comets and shooting stars. In the beginning the diviners' judgements were concerned with the fate of the country.

Celestial omens were not applied to individuals until the very end of Babylonian civilisation, around the 5th, 4th and 3rd centuries BCE, when planetary positions at the moment of birth began to receive consideration in predicting events destined to occur during the course of existence (the earliest nativity so far discovered appears on a cuneiform tablet dating from 410 BCE).

In Alexandria, in Hellenised Egypt, astronomers, Neo-Platonic philosophers and Hermeticists systematised and developed this hitherto fragmentary genethliacal astrology (from Greek genethle: birth). To the original Babylonian astrology, preoccupied with the planets' movements and positions in the zodiacal constellations, they added further doctrines, such as our so-called houses and aspects. Thus was born Greek astrology, which embarked on its triumphal march across the world, spreading from the Roman Empire as far as the Indian subcontinent.

But what was the source of genethliacal astrology's power of attraction? Why was it accepted throughout the entire known world, to the point of eclipsing in the minds of our contemporaries the ancient forms of Urania's art? (Note: In Greek mythology, Urania ("heavenly") was the muse of astronomy and astrology. She is usually depicted as having a globe in her left hand and a peg in the right. Messenger Spirit)

Chaldean TheologyThe basic doctrine of genethliacal astrology rests for the most part on an astral theology attributed to the Babylonians (though in fact largely developed by the Graeco-Romans), transmitted to Rome by Julian the Chaldean[1] and his son, Julian the Theurgist, during the reign of Emperor Marcus Aurelius (121-180 CE). Both were authors of the Chaldean Oracles, teachings adopted by the Neo-Platonic philosophers, notably Porphyry and Iamblichus (3rd and 4th centuries CE). The aphorisms of the Chaldean Oracles have since been reconstituted from commentaries and quotations made by early pagan and Christian authors.

According to Chaldean teaching:

The planetary spheres were conceived as a series of concentric spheres extending as far as the sphere of the zodiac of fixed stars, with the Earth held fast at the centre.

Sublunary bodies (between the Earth and the Moon's orbit) are of mixed nature: they are formed of varying blends of the four ever-interchanging elements, earth, water, fire and air, and so are subject to generation and corruption.

Bodies situated beyond the lunar orbit are, on the contrary, formed of pure fire or of a fifth quintessence whose designation (ether) derives from the unceasing motion of its essence (tein aei: ever running). It follows that all celestial bodies are incorruptible. With respect to the Earth, their ranking is defined by their period of revolution round the zodiac: the slower the star's motion, the further it is from the Earth. This supposition fixed the 'Chaldean Order' referred to from the 2nd century BCE onward.[2]

Each of the spheres was presided over by a god, as listed below, starting from the first sphere encircling the Earth:

the sphere of the lunar goddess Hecate, described by the Moon's orbit;

the sphere of Hermes, described by the planet Mercury's orbit round the sphere of the Moon;

the sphere of Aphrodite, described by the planet Venus' orbit embracing the sphere of Mercury;

the sphere of Apollo - that of the Sun - containing the spheres of the Moon, Mercury and Venus;

the sphere of Ares (Mars);

the sphere of Zeus (Jupiter);

the sphere of Chronos (Saturn);

lastly, the seven planetary spheres (Moon, Mercury, Venus, Sun, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn) were embraced by an eighth, the sphere of the fixed stars comprising the Zodiac;

then came the spheres situated beyond the planets: the sphere of the gods who reside beyond the planetary spheres; the sphere of the Demiurge in charge of creation; and the sphere of the First Intelligence. Finally, beyond the universe thus far expounded, the Creator of the world, He Whom the Chaldean Oracles name 'Father'.[3]

The Formulation of This Vision of The World

This system was long in maturing. The regularity of celestial
revolutions led the Babylonians to deduce that these were the work of an
ordering intelligence, hence they assimilated the stars to sidereal
gods.

Pythagoras had promulgated the doctrine of the perfection of the
sphere which, he supposed, must be the natural form of the Earth and of
the starry heaven. He therefore taught that the Earth was a sphere at
rest at the centre of the world.

Eudoxus of Cnidus (born c.408 BCE)
formulated the theory of concentric, or more precisely, homocentric
spheres. This system would later inspire the golden age of
Scholasticism, and through the medium of Aristotle, Thomas Aquinus' Summa Theologiae and Dante's Divine Comedy.
Aristotle had integrated the system of homocentric spheres into his
Physics, endowing the hitherto purely geometric spheres with physical
properties. This was inherited by the Greek astronomer and astrologer
Claudius Ptolemy (2nd century CE). For him the planetary spheres were
'etheric shells' causing the planets to move along their orbits.

In apparent ignorance of its profound meaning and in firm adherence
to the Aristotelian line, he expounded the system as an astronomical
model and explained astrology in terms of 'celestial influences' with no
religious or philosophic connotation. Thus, the theory according to
which the Earth is at the centre of the universe, with the other planets
revolving round it, formed the basis of the geocentric astronomical
so-called 'Ptolemaic System'.

False on the physical plane, where Ptolemy stood, this system is 'true'
from the symbolic point of view of the human geometric soul, in the
sense that, from the very beginning, man on Earth has always seen the
Moon and the planets revolving round him.

The Incarnation of The SoulIn Chaldean theology the spheres were the worlds presided over by
the planetary gods; worlds traversed by souls on their way to
incarnation and on their ascension after death. In the dream of Scipio,
which ends Book VI of his De Republica, Cicero explicitly states:

To men is imparted a soul emanated from those eternal
fires you call stars and luminaries which, round and spherical,
quickened by divine spirits, perform their revolutions and perambulate
their orbits with an admirable celerity.
According to these teachings, the human soul lives in the celestial
world. Then it enters the terrestrial world through conception and
birth, acquiring a physical body. On its way to incarnation the soul
traverses the planetary spheres, assuming a subtle, also known as
'astral', body.[4]
Just as in earthly life the native will each day put on a series of
garments, from light underclothes to heavy overcoat, so the incandescent
flame of the human soul, in the course of its descent from its universe
of origin into the terrestrial body, assumes a vesture formed of the
substances of the spheres it traverses.

This astral body comprises 'virtues' (qualities and instincts)
received from the planetary spheres traversed. Since this involves on
one hand the planetary spheres, while on the other their traversal takes
place outside time to end in birth into our terrestrial sphere, these
qualities are reflected in the configuration of the planets at the
moment of birth. Macrobius' Commentary On The Dream Of Scipio describes the descent through the planetary spheres thus:

"Souls freed of all material contagion dwell in
heaven; but those who, from this abode on high, where they are bathed in
a light eternal, have cast a downward glance at bodies and at what is
here below called life, and who have conceived for life a secret desire,
are dragged little by little down toward the nether regions of the
world, by nought but the weight of this earthbound thought. Yet no
sudden fall is this, but by degrees. The soul, perfectly incorporeal,
assumes not at once the gross mantle of corporeal clay, but
imperceptibly, and through a chain of adulterations suffered one by one
as it recedes from the pure and simple substance wherein once it dwelt,
to gird and swell itself with substance of the planets. For, in each of
the spheres placed beneath the heaven of fixed stars, it swathes itself
in several layers of ethereal matter which, imperceptibly, form an
intermediary bond by which it is united with the earthly body; so that
it suffers as many degradations or as many deaths as spheres traversed."
(Ch.XII)
The qualities acquired by the soul in the course of its descent through the spheres are thus described:

"And in its descent, not only does it [the soul]
assume the aforesaid new sheath of matter from these luminous bodies,
but it receives there the different faculties it must exercise
throughout its sojourn in the body. From Saturn it acquires reason and
understanding, or what is called the logical and contemplative faculty;
from Jupiter it receives the power to act, or executive power; Mars
gives it the valour required for enterprise, and a burning zeal; from
the Sun it receives the senses and the power of invention, that make it
feel and imagine; Venus moves it with desires; from the sphere of
Mercury it takes the power to express and enunciate what it thinks and
feels; finally, from the sphere of the Moon, it acquires the strength
needed to propagate by the generation and increase of bodies. This lunar
sphere, which is last and lowest with respect to divine bodies, is
first and highest with respect to earthly bodies. This lunar body, as it
were the sediment of celestial matter, at the same time is found to be
the purest substance of animal matter." (Ch.XIl)
This teaching underlies the practice of genethliacal astrology as it was
originally conceived. In the nativity the 'Chaldeans' saw a chart of
the astral bodies, as the journey through the planetary spheres had
structured them. Correctly interpreted, this chart would reveal the
native's constituent parts, material or more subtle. It would speak of
his daimon, the guardian angel who would accompany him on his voyage
here below and watch over the fulfilment of his fate.[5] It would describe, therefore, the earthly existence which had devolved upon him.

The Firmament

Beyond the threshold of the world stands the firmament (from the Latin firmamentum:
pillar, support), the vault of heaven, pillar of the stars, named
'sphere of the fixed stars'.

The Earth, or rather the observer, is
located at the centre.

The Moon is the nearest planet. She receives and
transmits to the observer the action of all the other celestial
agencies.

Then, from the nearest planet to the furthest: Mercury, Venus,
Sun, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn.
The Ascension of The SoulThe Poimandres, first treatise of the Corpus Hermeticum,
reveals what happens at death and after death. In order to return in
pristine purity to the divine, the soul must effect a divestment, in
reverse order, of the astral raiment it has donned. The soul first quits
the material element encountered in the last place, namely the stuff of
nature, that is the body furnished by nature. In the last place it
quits the first material element encountered in its fall, namely the
astral vestment of the highest sphere. Death entails a sequence of
effects:

the body is consigned to dissolution, and the visible form disappears;

the temperament (subject in each case to the individual blend
of the four elements), henceforth inert, is consigned to the personal
daimon (the guardian angel which, at birth, takes charge of the
newborn);

the bodily senses return to their respective planetary sources.

ire and lust, irrational passions, revert to unreasoning nature.

After this first divestment, the soul begins its ascension. Soaring
upward through the armature of spheres, it casts off at each station the
passion assumed there in the course of its descent: at the 1st station
(Moon), the faculty of increase and decrease; at the 2nd (Mercury),
malice and cunning; at the 3rd (Venus), the illusion of desire; at the
4th (Sun), the passion for command; at the 5th (Mars), audacity and
temerity; at the 6th (Jupiter), the lust for wealth; at the 7th
(Saturn), the falsehood that ensnares.

"And thereupon, stripped of the vestments generated
by the armature of spheres, the logos enters the ogdoadic essence (the
8th heaven, of pure ether, pure light), having nought now save its own
power." (Corpus Hermeticum I,26).
But it mounts yet higher, to the very Powers divine who reside above the
ogdoadic essence. It becomes in turn a Power, and enters into God.

"For such is the blessed consummation for those possessed of gnosis: to become God." (Corpus Hermeticum I,26).
This ascension to the Powers divine is not, however, automatic, the
spheres being equally obstacles impossible to overcome. Since the soul's
existence as a human being determines the heaven it can attain upon
divestment, it risks being unable to traverse one or other of the
spheres and plunging back into terrestrial existence. By fasting and
prayer, by sacred rites and the aid of mediating powers (gods for the
Greeks or Egyptians, angelic hierarchies for the medieval magi)
incarnate man can ease from here below his divestment and his inner
transmutation.
The Divestment of The Metals"Seven are the passages to perfection of matter"
- Wrote Cagliostro in the Catechism for the Apprentice of the Egyptian Lodge.
Like many other alchemists, Pernety speaks of 'washing', adding that
this involves passage through the seven planets, effected by seven
successive workings which lead from the different states of Mercury,
symbolised by the alchemical metals, to the state of gold.[6] In the light of what has just been expounded are such texts illumined.[7]

To be admitted to initiation in the Masonic Order, the layman must
divest himself of his metals. Since each metal belongs to a planet this
divestment must be intended to show the shedding of the planetary
vestures, that the being may contemplate the true light.

At the 28th Degree of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite,[8]
likewise adopted by the Ancient and Primitive Rite of Memphis-Misraism,
the candidate is made Knight of the Sun. During a first part of his
initiation he is regaled successively in seven cloaks of different
colours, draped round him by the seven ministrant angels of the seven
planets. During a second part, he divests himself of each of these
cloaks. He is at last allowed to contemplate the Sun.